NOTES ON ST PAUL'S FIRST EPISTLE TO THE CORINTHIANS
Corinth was a city of Achaia, situate on the isthmus which joins Peloponnesus, now
called the Morea, to the rest of Greece. Being so advantageously situated for trade, the
inhabitants of it abounded in riches, which, by too natural a consequence, led them into
luxury, lewdness, and all manner of vice. Yet even here St. Paul planted a numerous
church, chiefly of heathen converts; to whom, about three years after he had left Corinth,
he wrote this epistle from Ephesus; as well to correct various disorders of which they
were guilty, as to answer some questions which they bad proposed to him.
The Epistle consists of
I. The inscription, C. i. 1-3
II. The treatise itself, in which is,
1. An exhortation to concord, beating down all
glorying in the flesh, 4-C. iv. 21
2. A reproof,
1. For not excommunicating the incestuous
person, C. v. 1-12
2. For going to law before heathen judges, C. vi. 1-11
3. A dissuasive from fornication, 12-20
4. An answer to the questions they had proposed
concerning marriage, C. vii. 1, 10, 25, 36, 39
5. Concerning things sacrificed to idols, C. viii. 1-C. ix. 1
6. Concerning the veiling of women, 2-16
7. Concerning the Lord's supper, 17-34
8. Concerning spiritual gifts, C. xii. xiii. xiv
9. Concerning the resurrection, C. xv. 1-58
10.Concerning the collection for the poor,
the coming of himself, of Timothy, of Apollos,
the sum of all, C. xvi, 1, 5, 10, 12, 13, 14
II. The conclusion, 15, 17, 19-24
Chapter I
| 1 |
Paul, called to be an apostle - There is great propriety in every clause of the
salutation, particularly in this, as there were some in the church of Corinth who called
the authority of his mission in question. Through the will of God - Called "the
commandment of God," 1Tim 1:1 This was to the churches the ground of his
authority; to Paul himself, of an humble and ready mind. By the mention of God, the
authority of man is excluded, Gal 1:1; by the mention of the will of God, the
merit of Paul, 1Cor 15:8, &c. And Sosthenes - A Corinthian, St. Paul's
companion in travel. It was both humility and prudence in the apostle, thus to join his
name with his own, in an epistle wherein he was to reprove so many irregularities.
Sosthenes the brother - Probably this word is emphatical; as if he had said, Who, from a
Jewish opposer of the gospel, became a faithful brother. |
| 2 |
To the church of God which is in Corinth - St. Paul, writing in a familiar manner to
the Corinthians, as also to the Thessalonians and Galatians, uses this plain appellation.
To the other churches he uses a more solemn address. Sanctified through Jesus Christ - And
so undoubtedly they were in general, notwithstanding some exceptions. Called - Of Jesus
Christ, Rom 1:6 And - As the fruit of that calling made holy. With all that
in every place - Nothing could better suit that catholic love which St. Paul labours to
promote in this epistle, than such a declaration of his good wishes for every true
Christian upon earth. Call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ - This plainly implies
that all Christians pray to Christ, as well as to the Father through him. |
| 4 |
Always - Whenever I mention you to God in prayer. |
| 5 |
In all utterance and knowledge - Of divine things. These gifts the Corinthians
particularly admired. Therefore this congratulation naturally tended to soften their
spirits, and I make way for the reproofs which follow. |
| 6 |
The testimony of Christ - The gospel. Was confirmed among you - By these gifts
attending it. They knew they had received these by the hand of Paul: and this
consideration was highly proper, to revive in them their former reverence and affection
for their spiritual father. |
| 7 |
Waiting - With earnest desire. For the glorious revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ -
A sure mark of a true or false Christian, to long for, or dread, this revelation. |
| 8 |
Who will also - if you faithfully apply to him. Confirm you to the end. In the day of
Christ - Now it is our day, wherein we are to work out our salvation; then it will be
eminently the day of Christ, and of his glory in the saints. |
| 9 |
God is faithful - To all his promises; and therefore "to him that hath shall be
given." By whom ye are called - A pledge of his willingness to save you unto the
uttermost. |
| 10 |
Now I exhort you - Ye have faith and hope; secure love also. By the endearing name of
our Lord Jesus Christ - lnfinitely preferable to all the human names in which ye glory.
That ye all speak the same thing - They now spoke different things, 1Co 1:12 And
that there be no schisms among you - No alienation of affection from each other. Is this
word ever taken in any other sense in scripture? But that ye be joined in the same mind -
Affections, desires. And judgment - Touching all the grand truths of the gospel. |
| 11 |
It hath been declared to me by them of the family of Chloe - Whom some suppose to have
been the wife of Stephanas, and the mother of Fortunatus and Achaicus. By these three the
Corinthians had sent their letter to St. Paul, 1Cor 16:17. That there are
contentions - A word equivalent with schisms in the preceding verse. |
| 12 |
Now this I say - That is, what I mean is this: there are various parties among you,
who set themselves, one against an other, in behalf of the several teachers they admire.
And I of Christ - They spoke well, if they had not on this pretence despised their
teachers, 1Cor 4:8 Perhaps they valued themselves on having heard Christ
preach in his own person. |
| 13 |
Is Christ divided - Are not all the members still under one head? Was not he alone
crucified for you all; and were ye not all baptized in his name? The glory of Christ then
is not to be divided between him and his servants; neither is the unity of the body to be
torn asunder, seeing Christ is one still. |
| 14 |
I thank God - (A pious phrase for the common one, "I rejoice,") that, in the
course of his providence, I baptized none of you, but Crispus, once the ruler of the
synagogue, and Caius. |
| 15 |
Lest any should say that I had baptized in my own name - In order to attach them to
myself. |
| 16 |
I know not - That is, it does not at present occur to my memory, that I baptized any
other. |
| 17 |
For God did not send me to baptize - That was not my chief errand: those of inferior
rank and abilities could do it: though all the apostles were sent to baptize also, Matt
28:19 But to preach the gospel - So the apostle slides into his general
proposition: but not with wisdom of speech - With the artificial ornaments of discourse,
invented by human wisdom. Lest the cross of Christ should be made of none effect - The
whole effect of St. Paul's preaching was owing to the power of God accompanying the plain
declaration of that great truth, "Christ bore our sins upon the cross." But this
effect might have been imputed to another cause, had he come with that wisdom of speech
which they admired. |
| 18 |
To them that perish - By obstinately rejecting the only name whereby they can be
saved. But to us who are saved - Now saved from our sins, and in the way to everlasting
salvation, it is the great instrument of the power of God. |
| 19 |
For it is written - And the words are remarkably applicable to this great event. Isaiah
29:14 |
| 20 |
Where is the wise? &c. - The deliverance of Judea from Sennacherib is what Isaiah
refers to in these words; in a bold and beautiful allusion to which, the apostle in the
clause that follows triumphs over all the opposition of human wisdom to the victorious
gospel of Christ. What could the wise men of the gentiles do against this? or the Jewish
scribes? or the disputers of this world? - Those among both, who, proud of their
acuteness, were fond of controversy, and thought they could confute all opponents. Hath
not God made foolish the wisdom of this world - That is, shown it to be very foolishness. Isaiah
33:18 |
| 21 |
For since in the wisdom of God - According to his wise disposals, leaving them to make
the trial. The world - Whether Jewish or gentile, by all its boasted wisdom knew not God -
Though the whole creation declared its Creator, and though he declared himself by all the
prophets; it pleased God, by a way which those who perish count mere foolishness, to save
them that believe. |
| 22 |
For whereas the Jews demand of the apostles, as they did of their Lord, more signs
still, after all they have seen already; and the Greeks, or gentiles, seek wisdom - The
depths of philosophy, and the charms of eloquence. |
| 23 |
We go on to preach, in a plain and historical, not rhetorical or philosophical,
manner, Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumblingblock - Just opposite to the
"signs" they demand. And to the Greeks foolishness - A silly tale, just opposite
to the wisdom they seek. |
| 24 |
But to them that are called - And obey the heavenly calling. Christ - With his cross,
his death, his life, his kingdom. And they experience, first, that he is the power, then,
that he is the wisdom, of God. |
| 25 |
Because the foolishness of God - The gospel scheme, which the world judge to be mere
foolishness, is wiser than the wisdom of men; and, weak as they account it, stronger than
all the strength of men. |
| 26 |
Behold your calling - What manner of men they are whom God calls. That not many wise
men after the flesh - In the account of the world. Not many mighty - Men of power and
authority. |
| 28 |
Things that are not - The Jews frequently called the gentiles, "Them that are
not," 2 Esdras vi. 56, 57. In so supreme contempt did they hold them. The things that
are - In high esteem. |
| 29 |
That no flesh - A fit appellation. Flesh is fair, but withering as grass. May glory
before God - In God we ought to glory. |
| 30 |
Of him - Out of his free grace and mercy. Are ye Engrafted into Christ Jesus, who is
made unto us that believe wisdom, who were before utterly foolish and ignorant.
Righteousness - The sole ground of our justification, who were before under the wrath and
curse of God. Sanctification - A principle of universal holiness, whereas before we were
altogether dead in sin. And redemption - That is, complete deliverance from all evil, and
eternal bliss both of soul and body. |
| 31 |
Let him glory in the Lord - Not in himself, not in the flesh, not in the world. Jer
9:23,24 |
Chapter II
| 1 |
And I accordingly came to you, not with loftiness of speech or of wisdom - I did not
affect either deep wisdom or eloquence. Declaring the testimony of God - What God gave me
to testify concerning his Son. |
| 2 |
I determined not to know anything - To wave all my other knowledge, and not to preach
anything, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified - That is, what he did, suffered, taught. A
part is put for the whole. |
| 3 |
And I was with you - At my first entrance. In weakness - Of body, 2Cor 12:7 And
in fear - Lest I should offend any. And in much trembling - The emotion of my mind
affecting my very body. |
| 4 |
And my speech in private, as well as my public preaching, was not with the persuasive
words of human wisdom, such as the wise men of the world use; but with the demonstration
of the Spirit and of power - With that powerful kind of demonstration, which flows from
the Holy Spirit; which works on the conscience with the most convincing light, and the
most persuasive evidence. |
| 5 |
That your faith might not be built on the wisdom or power of man, but on the wisdom
and power of God. |
| 6 |
Yet we speak wisdom - Yea, the truest and most excellent wisdom. Among the perfect -
Adult, experienced Christians. By wisdom here he seems to mean, not the whole Christian
doctrine, but the most sublime and abstruse parts of it. But not the wisdom admired and
taught by the men of this world, nor of the rulers of this world, Jewish or heathen, that
come to nought - Both they and their wisdom, and the world itself. |
| 7 |
But we speak the mysterious wisdom of God, which was hidden for many ages from all the
world, and is still hidden even from "babes in Christ;" much more from all
unbelievers. Which God ordained before the world - So far is this from coming to nought,
like worldly wisdom. For our glory - Arising from the glory of our Lord, and then to be
revealed when all worldly glory vanishes. |
| 8 |
Had they known it - That wisdom. They would not have crucified - Punished as a slave.
The Lord of glory - The giving Christ this august title, peculiar to the great Jehovah,
plainly shows him to be the supreme God. In like manner the Father is styled, "the
Father of glory," Eph 1:17; and the Holy Ghost, "the Spirit of
glory," 1Pet 4:14. The application of this title to all the three, shows
that the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are "the God of glory;" as the only true
God is called, Psa 29:3, and Acts 7:2. |
| 9 |
But this ignorance of theirs fulfils what is written concerning the blessings of the
Messiah's kingdom. No natural man hath either seen, heard, or known, the things which God
hath prepared, saith the prophet, for them that love him. Isaiah 64:4 |
| 10 |
But God hath revealed - Yea, and "freely given," 1Co 2:12. Them
to us - Even inconceivable peace, and joy unspeakable. By his Spirit - Who intimately and
fully knows them. For the Spirit searcheth even the deep things of God - Be they ever so
hidden and mysterious; the depths both of his nature and his kingdom. |
| 11 |
For what man knoweth the things of a man - All the inmost recesses of his mind;
although men are all of one nature, and so may the more easily know one another. So the
things of God knoweth no one but the Spirit - Who, consequently, is God. |
| 12 |
Now we have received, not the spirit of the world - This spirit is not properly
received; for the men of the world always had it. But Christians receive the Spirit of
God, which before they had not. |
| 13 |
Which also we speak - As well as know. In words taught by the Holy Spirit - Such are
all the words of scripture. How high a regard ought we, then, to retain for them!
Explaining spiritual things by spiritual words; or, adapting spiritual words to spiritual
things - Being taught of the Spirit to express the things of the Spirit. |
| 14 |
But the natural man - That is, every man who hath not the Spirit; who has no other way
of obtaining knowledge, but by his senses and natural understanding. Receiveth not - Does
not understand or conceive. The things of the Spirit - The things revealed by the Spirit
of God, whether relating to his nature or his kingdom. For they are foolishness to him -
He is so far from understanding, that he utterly despises, them Neither can he know them -
As he has not the will, so neither has he the power. Because they are spiritually
discerned - They can only be discerned by the aid of that Spirit, and by those spiritual
senses, which he has not. |
| 15 |
But the spiritual man - He that hath the Spirit. Discerneth all the things of God
whereof we have been speaking. Yet he himself is discerned by no man - No natural men.
They neither understand what he is, nor what he says. |
| 16 |
Who - What natural man. We - Spiritual men; apostles in particular. Have - Know,
understand. The mind of Christ - Concerning the whole plan of gospel salvation. Isaiah
40:13 |
Chapter III
| 1 |
And I, brethren - He spoke before, 1Cor 2:1, of his entrance, now of his
progress, among them. Could not speak to you as unto spiritual - Adult, experienced
Christians. But as unto men who were still in great measure carnal, as unto babes in
Christ - Still weak in grace, though eminent in gifts, 1Cor 1:5. |
| 2 |
I fed you, as babes, with milk - The first and plainest truths of the gospel. So
should every preacher suit his doctrine to his hearers. |
| 3 |
For while there is among you emulation in your hearts, strife in your words, and
actual divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk according to men - As mere men; not as
Christians, according to God. |
| 4 |
I am of Apollos - St. Paul named himself and Apollos, to show that he would condemn
any division among them, even though it were in favour of himself, or the dearest friend
he had in the world. Are ye not carnal - For the Spirit of God allows no party zeal. |
| 5 |
Ministers - Or servants. By whom ye believed, as the Lord, the Master of those
servants, gave to every man. |
| 7 |
God that giveth the increase - Is all in all: without him neither planting nor
watering avails. |
| 8 |
But he that planteth and he that watereth are one - Which is another argument against
division. Though their labours are different. they are all employed in one general work, -
the saving souls. Hence he takes occasion to speak of the reward of them that labour
faithfully, and the awful account to be given by all. Every man shall receive his own
peculiar reward according to his own peculiar labour - Not according to his success; but
he who labours much, though with small success, shall have a great reward. Has not all
this reasoning the same force still? The ministers are still surely instruments in God's
hand, and depend as entirely as ever on his blessing, to give the increase to their
labours. Without this, they are nothing: with it, their part is so small, that they hardly
deserve to be mentioned. May their hearts and hands be more united; and, retaining a due
sense of the honour God doeth them in employing them, may they faithfully labour, not as
for themselves, but for the great Proprietor of all, till the day come when he will reward
them in full proportion to their fidelity and diligence! |
| 9 |
For we are all fellowlabourers - God's labourers, and fellowlabourers with each other.
Ye are God's husbandry - This is the sum of what went before: it is a comprehensive word,
taking in both a field, a garden, and a vineyard. Ye are God's building - This is the sum
of what follows. |
| 10 |
According to the grace of God given to me - This he premises, lest he should seem to
ascribe it to himself. Let every one take heed how he buildeth thereon - That all his
doctrines may be consistent with the foundation. |
| 11 |
For other foundation - On which the whole church: and all its doctrines, duties, and
blessings may be built. Can no man lay than what is laid - In the counsels of divine
wisdom, in the promises and prophecies of the Old Testament, in the preaching of the
apostles, St. Paul in particular. Which is Jesus Christ - Who, in his person and offices,
is the firm, immovable Rock of Ages, every way sufficient to bear all the weight that God
himself, or the sinner, when he believes, can lay upon him. |
| 12 |
If any one build gold, silver, costly stones - Three sorts of materials which will
bear the fire; true and solid doctrines. Wood, hay, stubble - Three which will not bear
the fire. Such are all doctrines, ceremonies, and forms of human invention; all but the
substantial, vital truths of Christianity. |
| 13 |
The time is coming when every one's work shall be made manifest: for the day of the
Lord, that great and final day, shall declare it - To all the world. For it is revealed -
What faith beholds as so certain and so near is spoken of as already present. By fire;
yea, the fire shall try every one's work, of what sort it is - The strict process of that
day will try every man's doctrines, whether they come up to the scripture standard or not.
Here is a plain allusion to the flaming light and consuming heat of the general
conflagration. But the expression, when applied to the trying of doctrines, and consuming
those that are wrong, is evidently figurative; because no material fire can have such an
effect on what is of a moral nature. And therefore it is added, he who builds wood, hay,
or stubble, shall be saved as through the fire - Or, as narrowly as a man escapes through
the fire, when his house is all in flames about him. This text, then, is so far from
establishing the Romish purgatory, that it utterly overthrows it. For the fire here
mentioned does not exist till the day of judgment: therefore, if this be the fire of
purgatory, it follows that purgatory does not exist before the day of judgment. |
| 14 |
He shall receive a reward - A peculiar degree of glory. Some degree even the other
will receive, seeing he held the foundation; though through ignorance he built thereon
what would not abide the fire. |
| 15 |
He shall suffer loss - The loss of that peculiar degree of glory. |
| 16 |
Ye - All Christians. Are the temple of God - The most noble kind of building, 1Cor
3:9. |
| 17 |
If any man destroy the temple of God - Destroy a real Christian, by schisms, or
doctrines fundamentally wrong. Him shall God destroy - He shall not be saved at all; not
even as through the fire." |
| 18 |
Let him become a fool in this world - Such as the world accounts so. That he may
become wise - In God's account. |
| 19 |
For all the boasted wisdom of the world is mere foolishness in the sight of God. He
taketh the wise in their own craftiness - Not only while they think they are acting
wisely, but by their very wisdom, which itself is their snare, and the occasion of their
destruction. Job 5:13. |
| 20 |
That they are but vain - Empty, foolish; they and all their thoughts. Psalm
94:11. |
| 21 |
Therefore - Upon the whole. Let none glory in men - So as to divide into parties on
their account. For all things are yours - and we in particular. We are not your lords, but
rather your servants. |
| 22 |
Whether Paul or Apollos, or Cephas - We are all equally yours, to serve you for
Christ's sake. Or the world - This leap from Peter to the world greatly enlarges the
thought, and argues a kind of impatience of enumerating the rest. Peter and every one in
the whole world, however excellent in gifts, or grace, or office, are also your servants
for Christ's sake. Or life, or death - These, with all their various circumstances, are
disposed as will be most for your advantage. Or things present - On earth. Or things to
come - In heaven. Contend, therefore, no more about these little things; but be ye united
in love, as ye are in blessings. |
| 23 |
And ye are Christ's - His property, his subjects. his members. And Christ is God's -
As Mediator, he refers all his services to his Father's glory. |
Chapter IV
| 1 |
Let a man account us, as servants of Christ - The original word properly signifies
such servants as laboured at the oar in rowing vessels; and, accordingly, intimates the
pains which every faithful minister takes in his Lord's work. O God, where are these
ministers to be found? Lord, thou knowest. And stewards of the mysteries of God -
Dispenseth of the mysterious truths of the gospel. |
| 3 |
Yea, I judge not myself - My final state is not to be determined by my own judgment. |
| 4 |
I am not conscious to myself of anything evil; yet am I not hereby justified - I
depend not on this, as a sufficient justification of myself in God's account. But he that
judgeth me is the Lord - By his sentence I am to stand or fall. |
| 5 |
Therefore judge nothing before the time - Appointed for judging all men. Until the
Lord come, who, in order to pass a righteous judgment, which otherwise would be
impossible, will both bring to light the things which are now covered with impenetrable
darkness, and manifest the most secret springs of action, the principles and intentions of
every heart. And then shall every one - Every faithful steward, have praise of God. |
| 6 |
These things - Mentioned, 1Cor 1:10, &c. I have by a very obvious
figure transferred to myself and Apollos - And Cephas, instead of naming those particular
preachers at Corinth, to whom ye are so fondly attached. That ye may learn by us - From
what has been said concerning us, who, however eminent we are, are mere instruments in
God's hand. Not to think of any man above what is here written - Or above what scripture
warrants. 1Cor 3:7 |
| 7 |
Who maketh thee to differ - Either in gifts or graces. As if thou hadst not received
it - As if thou hadst it originally from thyself. |
| 8 |
Now ye are full - The Corinthians abounded with spiritual gifts; and so did the
apostles: but the apostles, by continual want and sufferings, were kept from self -
complacency. The Corinthians suffering nothing, and having plenty of all things, were
pleased with and applauded themselves; and they were like children who, being raised in
the world, disregard their poor parents. Now ye are full, says the apostle, in a beautiful
gradation, ye are rich, ye have reigned as kings - A proverbial expression, denoting the
most splendid and plentiful circumstances. Without any thought of us. And I would ye did
reign - In the best sense: I would ye had attained the height of holiness. That we might
reign with you - Having no more sorrow on your account, but sharing in your happiness. |
| 9 |
God hath set forth us last, as appointed to death - Alluding to the Roman custom of
bringing forth those persons last on the stage, either to fight with each other, or with
wild beasts, who were devoted to death; so that, if they escaped one day, they were
brought out again and again, till they were killed. |
| 10 |
We are fools, in the account of the world, for Christ's sake, but ye are wise in
Christ - Though ye are Christians, ye think yourselves wise; and ye have found means to
make the world think you so too. We are weak - In presence, in infirmities, in sufferings.
But ye are strong - In just opposite circumstances. |
| 11 |
And are naked - Who can imagine a more glorious triumph of the truth, than that which
is gained in these circumstances when St. Paul, with an impediment in his speech, and a
person rather contemptible than graceful, appeared in a mean, perhaps tattered, dress
before persons of the highest distinction, and yet commanded such attention. and made such
deep impressions upon them! |
| 12 |
We bless - suffer it - intreat - We do not return revilings, persecution, defamation;
nothing but blessing. |
| 13 |
We are made as the filth of the world, and offscouring of all things - Such were those
poor wretches among the heathens, who were taken from the dregs of the people, to be
offered as expiatory sacrifices to the infernal gods. They were loaded with curses,
affronts, and injuries, all the way they went to the altars; and when the ashes of those
unhappy men were thrown into the sea, these very names were given them in the ceremony. |
| 14 |
I do not write these things to shame you, but as my beloved children I warn you - It
is with admirable prudence and sweetness the apostle adds this, to prevent any unkind
construction of his words. |
| 15 |
I have begotten you - This excludes not only Apollos, his successor, but also Silas
and Timothy, his companions; and the relation between a spiritual father and his children
brings with it an inexpressible nearness and affection. |
| 16 |
Be ye followers of me - In that spirit and behaviour which I have so largely declared.
|
| 17 |
My beloved son - Elsewhere he styles him "brother," 2Cor 1:1;
but here paternal affection takes place. As I teach - No less by example than precept. |
| 18 |
Now some are puffed up - St. Paul saw, by a divine light, the thoughts which would
arise in their hearts. As if I would not come - Because I send Timothy. |
| 19 |
I will know - He here shows his fatherly authority Not the big, empty speech of these
vain boasters, but how much of the power of God attends them. |
| 20 |
For the kingdom of God - Real religion, does not consist in words, but in the power of
God ruling the heart. |
| 21 |
With a rod - That is, with severity. |
Chapter V
| 1 |
Fornication - The original word implies criminal conversation of any kind whatever.
His father's wife - While his father was alive. |
| 2 |
Are ye puffed up? Should ye not rather have mourned - Have solemnly humbled
yourselves, and at that time of solemn mourning have expelled that notorious sinner from
your communion? |
| 3 |
I verily, as present in spirit - Having a full (it seems, a miraculous) view of the
whole fact. Have already, as if I were actually present, judged him who hath so
scandalously done this. |
| 4 |
And my spirit - Present with you. With the power of the Lord Jesus Christ - To confirm
my sentence. |
| 5 |
To deliver such an one - This was the highest degree of punishment in the Christian
church; and we may observe, the passing this sentence was the act of the apostle, not of
the Corinthians. To Satan - Who was usually permitted, in such cases, to inflict pain or
sickness on the offender. For the destruction - Though slowly and gradually. Of the flesh
- Unless prevented by speedy repentance. |
| 6 |
Your glorying - Either in your gifts or prosperity, at such a time as this, is not
good. Know ye not that a little leaven - One sin, or one sinner. Leaveneth the whole lump
- Diffuses guilt and infection through the whole congregation. |
| 7 |
Purge out therefore the old leaven - Both of sinners and of sin. That ye may be a new
lump, as ye are unleavened - That is, that being unleavened ye may be a new lump, holy
unto the Lord. For our passover is slain for us - The Jewish passover, about the time of
which this epistle was wrote, 1Cor 5:11, was only a type of this. What
exquisite skill both here and everywhere conducts the zeal of the inspired writer! How
surprising a transition is here, and yet how perfectly natural! The apostle, speaking of
the incestuous criminal, slides into his darling topic, - crucified Saviour. Who would
have expected it on such an occasion. Yet, when it is thus brought in, who does not see
and admire both the propriety of the subject, and the delicacy of its introduction? |
| 8 |
Therefore let us keep the feast - Let us feed on him by faith. Here is a plain
allusion to the Lord's supper, which was instituted in the room of the passover. Not with
the old leaven - Of heathenism or Judaism. Malignity is stubbornness in evil. Sincerity
and truth seem to be put here for the whole of true, inward religion. |
| 9 |
I wrote to you in a former epistle - And, doubtless, both St. Paul and the other
apostles wrote many things which are not extant now. Not to converse - Familiarly; not to
contract any intimacy or acquaintance with them, more than is absolutely necessary. |
| 10 |
But I did not mean that you should altogether refrain from conversing with heathens,
though they are guilty in some of these respects. Covetous, rapacious, idolaters - Sinners
against themselves, their neighbour, God. For then ye must go out of the world - Then all
civil commerce must cease. So that going out of the world, which some account a
perfection, St. Paul accounts an utter absurdity. |
| 11 |
Who is named a brother - That is, a Christian; especially if a member of the same
congregation. Rapacious - Guilty of oppression, extortion, or any open injustice. No, not
to eat with him - Which is the lowest degree of familiarity. |
| 12 |
I speak of Christians only. For what have I to do to judge heathens? But ye, as well
as I, judge those of your own community. |
| 13 |
Them that are without God will judge - The passing sentence on these he hath reserved
to himself. And ye will take away that wicked person - This properly belongs to you. |
Chapter VI
| 1 |
The unjust - The heathens. A Christian could expect no justice from these. The saints
- Who might easily decide these smaller differences in a private and friendly manner. |
| 2 |
Know ye not - This expression occurs six times in this single chapter, and that with a
peculiar force; for the Corinthians knew and gloried in it, but they did not practise.
That the saints - After having been judged themselves. Shall judge the world - Shall be
assessors with Christ in the judgment wherein he shall condemn all the wicked, as well
angels as men, Matt 19:28 Rev 20:4. |
| 4 |
Them who are of no esteem in the church - That is, heathens, who, as such, could be in
no esteem with the Christians. |
| 5 |
Is there not one among you, who are such admirers of wisdom, that is wise enough to
decide such causes? |
| 7 |
Indeed there is a fault, that ye quarrel with each other at all, whether ye go to law
or no. Why do ye not rather suffer wrong - All men cannot or will not receive this saying.
Many aim only at this, "I will neither do wrong, nor suffer it." These are
honest heathens, but no Christians. |
| 8 |
Nay, ye do wrong - Openly. And defraud - Privately. O how powerfully did the mystery
of iniquity already work! |
| 9 |
Idolatry is here placed between fornication and adultery, because they generally
accompanied it. Nor the effeminate - Who live in an easy, indolent way; taking up no
cross, enduring no hardship. But how is this? These good - natured, harmless people are
ranked with idolaters and sodomites! We may learn hence, that we are never secure from the
greatest sins, till we guard against those which are thought the least; nor, indeed, till
we think no sin is little, since every one is a step toward hell. |
| 11 |
And such were some of you: but ye are washed - From those gross abominations; nay, and
ye are inwardly sanctified; not before, but in consequence of, your being justified in the
name - That is, by the merits, of the Lord Jesus, through which your sins are forgiven.
And by the Spirit of our God - By whom ye are thus washed and sanctified. |
| 12 |
All things - Which are lawful for you. Are lawful for me, but all things are not
always expedient - Particularly when anything would offend my weak brother; or when it
would enslave my own soul. For though all things are lawful for me, yet I will not be
brought under the power of any - So as to be uneasy when I abstain from it; for, if so,
then I am under the power of it. |
| 13 |
As if he had said, I speak this chiefly with regard to meats; (and would to God all
Christians would consider it!) particularly with regard to those offered to idols, and
those forbidden in the Mosaic law. These, I grant, are all indifferent, and have their
use, though it is only for a time: then meats, and the organs which receive them, will
together moulder into dust. But the case is quite otherwise with fornication. This is not
indifferent, but at all times evil. For the body is for the Lord - Designed only for his
service. And the Lord, in an important sense, for the body - Being the Saviour of this, as
well as of the soul; in proof of which God hath already raised him from the dead. |
| 16 |
Gen 2:24. |
| 17 |
But he that is joined to the Lord - By faith. Is one spirit with him - And shall he
make himself one flesh with an harlot? |
| 18 |
Flee fornication - All unlawful commerce with women, with speed, with abhorrence, with
all your might. Every sin that a man commits against his neighbour terminates upon an
object out of himself, and does not so immediately pollute his body, though it does his
soul. But he that committeth fornication, sinneth against his own body - Pollutes,
dishonours, and degrades it to a level with brute beasts. |
| 19 |
And even your body is not, strictly speaking, your own even this is the temple of the
Holy Ghost - Dedicated to him, and inhabited by him. What the apostle calls elsewhere
"the temple of God," 1Cor 3:16,17, and "the temple of the
living God," 2Cor 6:16, he here styles the temple of the Holy Ghost;
plainly showing that the Holy Ghost is the living God. |
| 20 |
Glorify God with your body, and your spirit - Yield your bodies and all their members,
as well as your souls and all their faculties, as instruments of righteousness to God.
Devote and employ all ye have, and all ye are, entirely, unreservedly, and for ever, to
his glory. |
Chapter VII
| 1 |
It is good for a man - Who is master of himself. Not to touch a women - That is, not
to marry. So great and many are the advantages of a single life. |
| 2 |
Yet, when it is needful, in order to avoid fornication, let every man have his own
wife. His own - For Christianity allows no polygamy. |
| 3 |
Let not married persons fancy that there is any perfection in living with each other,
as if they were unmarried. The debt - This ancient reading seems far more natural than the
common one. |
| 4 |
The wife - the husband - Let no one forget this, on pretence of greater purity. |
| 5 |
Unless it be by consent for a time - That on those special and solemn occasions ye may
entirely give yourselves up to the exercises of devotion. Lest - If ye should long remain
separate. Satan tempt you - To unclean thoughts, if not actions too. |
| 6 |
But I say this - Concerning your separating for a time and coming together again.
Perhaps he refers also to 1Co 7:2. |
| 7 |
For I would that all men were herein even as I - I would that all believers who are
now unmarried would remain "eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake" St. Paul,
having tasted the sweetness of this liberty, wished others to enjoy it, as well as
himself. But every one hath his proper gift from God - According to our Lord's
declaration, "All men cannot receive this saying, save they," the happy few, to
whom it is given," Matt 19:11. |
| 8 |
It is good for them if they remain even as I - That St. Paul was then single is
certain and from Acts 7:58, compared with the following parts of the history,
it seems probable that he always was so. It does not appear that this declaration, any
more than 1Co 7:1, hath any reference at all to a state of persecution. |
| 10 |
Not I - Only. But the Lord - Christ; by his express command, Matt 5:32. |
| 11 |
But if she depart - Contrary to this express prohibition. And let not the husband put
away his wife - Except for the cause of adultery. |
| 12 |
To the rest - Who are married to unbelievers. Speak I - By revelation from God, though
our Lord hath not left any commandment concerning it. Let him not put her away - The Jews,
indeed, were obliged of old to put away their idolatrous wives, Ezra 10:3;
but their case was quite different. They were absolutely forbid to marry idolatrous women;
but the persons here spoken of were married while they were both in a state of heathenism.
|
| 14 |
For the unbelieving husband hath, in many instances, been sanctified by the wife -
Else your children would have been brought up heathens; whereas now they are Christians.
As if he had said, Ye see the proof of it before your eyes. |
| 15 |
A brother or a sister - A Christian man or woman. Is not enslaved - is at full
liberty. In such cases: but God hath called us to peace - To live peaceably with them, if
it be possible. |
| 17 |
But as God hath distributed - The various stations of life, and various relations, to
every one, let him take care to discharge his duty therein. The gospel disannuls none of
these. And thus I ordain in all the churches - As a point of the highest concern. |
| 19 |
Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing - Will neither promote nor
obstruct our salvation. The one point is, keeping the commandments of God; "faith
working by love." |
| 20 |
In the calling - The outward state. Wherein he is - When God calls him. Let him not
seek to change this, without a clear direction from Providence. |
| 21 |
Care not for it - Do not anxiously seek liberty. But if thou canst be free, use it
rather - Embrace the opportunity. |
| 22 |
Is the Lord's freeman - Is free in this respect. The Greek word implies one that was a
slave, but now is free. Is the bondman of Christ - Not free in this respect; not at
liberty to do his own will. |
| 23 |
Ye are bought with a price - Ye belong to God; therefore, where it can be avoided, do
not become the bondslaves of men - Which may expose you to many temptations. |
| 24 |
Therein abide with God - Doing all things as unto God, and as in his immediate
presence. They who thus abide with God preserve an holy indifference with regard to
outward things. |
| 25 |
Now concerning virgins - Of either sex. I have no commandment from the Lord - By a
particular revelation. Nor was it necessary he should; for the apostles wrote nothing
which was not divinely inspired: but with this difference, - sometimes they had a
particular revelation, and a special commandment; at other times they wrote from the
divine light which abode with them, the standing treasure of the Spirit of God. And this,
also, was not their private opinion, but a divine rule of faith and practice. As one whom
God hath made faithful in my apostolic office; who therefore faithfully deliver what I
receive from him. |
| 26, 27 |
This is good for the present distress - While any church is under persecution. For a
man to continue as he is - Whether married or unmarried. St. Paul does not here urge the
present distress as a reason for celibacy, any more than for marriage; but for a man's not
seeking to alter his state, whatever it be, but making the best of it. |
| 27 |
See note ... "1Co 7:26". |
| 28 |
Such will have trouble in the flesh - Many outward troubles. But I spare you - I speak
as little and as tenderly as possible. |
| 29 |
But this I say, brethren - With great confidence. The time of our abode here is short.
It plainly follows, that even they who have wives be as serious, zealous, active, dead to
the world, as devoted to God, as holy in all manner of conversation, as if they had none -
By so easy a transition does the apostle slide from every thing else to the one thing
needful; and, forgetting whatever is temporal, is swallowed up in eternity. |
| 30 |
And they that weep, as if they wept not - "Though sorrowful, yet always
rejoicing." They that rejoice, as if they rejoiced not - Tempering their joy with
godly fear. They that buy, as if they possessed not - Knowing themselves to be only
stewards, not proprietors. |
| 31 |
And they that use this world, as not abusing it - Not seeking happiness in it, but in
God: using every thing therein only in such a manner and degree as most tends to the
knowledge and love of God. For the whole scheme and fashion of this world - This marrying,
weeping, rejoicing, and all the rest, not only will pass, but now passeth away, is this
moment flying off like a shadow. |
| 32 |
Now I would have you - For this flying moment. Without carefulness - Without any
incumbrance of your thoughts. The unmarried man - If he understand and use the advantage
he enjoys - Careth only for the things of the Lord, how he may please the Lord. |
| 33 |
But the married careth for the things of the world - And it in his duty so to do, so
far as becomes a Christian. How he may please his wife - And provide all things needful
for her and his family. |
| 34 |
There is a difference also between a wife and a virgin - Whether the church be under
persecution or not. The unmarried woman - If she know and use her privilege. Careth only
for the things of the Lord - All her time, care, and thoughts centre in this, how she may
be holy both in body and spirit. This is the standing advantage of a single life, in all
ages and nations. But who makes a suitable use of it? |
| 35 |
Not that I may cast a snare upon you - Who are not able to receive this saying. But
for your profit - Who are able. That ye may resolutely and perseveringly wait upon the
Lord - The word translated wait signifies sitting close by a person, in a good posture to
hear. So Mary sat at the feet of Jesus, Luke 10:39. Without distraction -
Without having the mind drawn any way from its centre; from its close attention to God; by
any person, or thing, or care, or incumbrance whatsoever. |
| 36 |
But if any parent think he should otherwise act indecently - Unbecoming his character.
Toward his virgin daughter, if she be above age, (or of full age,) and need so require, 1Co
7:9, let them marry - Her suitor and she. |
| 37 |
Having no necessity - Where there is no such need. But having power over his own will
- Which would incline him to desire the increase of his family, and the strengthening it
by new relations. |
| 38 |
Doeth better - If there be no necessity. |
| 39 |
Only in the Lord - That is, only if Christians marry Christians: a standing direction,
and one of the utmost importance. |
| 40 |
I also - As well as any of you. Have the Spirit of God - Teaching me all things This
does not imply any doubt; but the strongest certainty of it, together with a reproof of
them for calling it in question. Whoever, therefore, would conclude from hence, that St.
Paul was not certain he had the Spirit of Christ, neither understands the true import of
the words, nor considers how expressly he lays claim to the Spirit, both in this epistle, 1Co
2:16, 14:37, and the other. 2Co 13:3. Indeed, it may be doubted
whether the word here and elsewhere translated think, does not always imply the fullest
and strongest assurance. See 1Cor 10:12. |
Chapter VIII
| 1 |
Now concerning the next question you proposed. All of us have knowledge - A gentle
reproof of their self - conceit. Knowledge without love always puffeth up. Love alone
edifies - Builds us up in holiness. |
| 2 |
If any man think he knoweth any thing - Aright, unless so far he is taught by God. He
knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know - Seeing there is no true knowledge without divine
love. |
| 3 |
He is known - That is, approved, by him. Psalm 1:6. |
| 4 |
We know that an idol is nothing - A mere nominal god, having no divinity, virtue, or
power. |
| 5 |
For though there be that are called gods - By the heathens both celestial, (as they
style them,) terrestrial, and infernal deities. |
| 6 |
Yet to us - Christians. There is but one God - This is exclusive, not of the One Lord,
as if he were an inferior deity; but only of the idols to which the One God is opposed.
From whom are all things - By creation, providence, and grace. And we for him - The end of
all we are, have, and do. And one Lord - Equally the object of divine worship. By whom are
all things - Created, sustained, and governed. And we by him - Have access to the Father,
and all spiritual blessings. |
| 7 |
Some eat, with consciousness of the idol - That is, fancying it is something, and that
it makes the meat unlawful to be eaten. And their conscience, being weak - Not rightly
informed. Is defiled - contracts guilt by doing it. |
| 8 |
But meat commendeth us not to God - Neither by eating, nor by refraining from it.
Eating and not eating are in themselves things merely indifferent. |
| 10 |
For if any one see thee who hast knowledge - Whom he believes to have more knowledge
than himself, and who really hast this knowledge, that an idol is nothing - sitting down
to an entertainment in an idol temple. The heathens frequently made entertainments in
their temples, on what hath been sacrificed to their idols. Will not the conscience of him
that is weak - Scrupulous. Be encouraged - By thy example. To eat - Though with a doubting
conscience. |
| 11 |
And through thy knowledge shall the weak brother perish, for whom Christ died? - And
for whom thou wilt not lose a meal's meat, so far from dying for him! We see, Christ died
even for them that perish. |
| 12 |
Ye sin against Christ - Whose members they are. |
| 13 |
If meat - Of any kind. Who will follow this example? What preacher or private
Christian will abstain from any thing lawful in itself, when it offends a weak brother? |
Chapter IX
| 1 |
Am I not free? am I not an apostle? - That is, Have not I the liberty of a common
Christian? yea, that of an apostle? He vindicates his apostleship, 1Co 9:1 -
3: his apostolical liberty, 1Co 9:4 - 19. Have I not seen Jesus Christ? -
Without this he could not have been one of those first grand witnesses. Are not ye my work
in the Lord - A full evidence that God hath sent me? And yet some, it seems, objected to
his being an apostle, because he had not asserted his privilege in demanding and receiving
such maintenance from the churches as was due to that office. |
| 2 |
Ye are the seal of my apostleship - Who have received not only faith by my mouth, but
all the gifts of the Spirit by my hands. |
| 3 |
My answer to them who examine me - Concerning my apostleship. Is this - Which I have
now given. |
| 4 |
Have we not power - I and my fellowlabourers. To eat and to drink - At the expense of
those among whom we labour. |
| 5 |
Have we not power to lead about with us a sister, a wife - And to demand sustenance
for her also? As well as the other apostles - Who therefore, it is plain, did this. And
Peter - Hence we learn,
- That St. Peter continued to live with his wife after he became an apostle:
- That he had no rights as an apostle which were not common to St. Paul.
|
| 6 |
To forbear working - With our hands. |
| 8 |
Do I speak as a man - Barely on the authority of human reason? Does not God also say,
in effect, the same thing? The ox that treadeth out the corn - This was the custom in
Judea, and many eastern nations. In several of them it is retained still. And at this day,
horses tread out the corn in some parts of Germany. |
| 9 |
Doth God - In this direction. Take care for oxen - Only? Hath he not a farther
meaning? And so undoubtedly he hath in all the other Mosaic laws of this kind. |
| 10 |
He who ploweth ought to plow in hope - Of reaping. This seems to be a proverbial
expression. And he that thresheth in hope - Ought not to be disappointed, ought to eat the
fruit of his labours. And ought they who labour in God's husbandry. Deut 25:4 |
| 11 |
Is it a great matter if we shall reap as much of your carnal things - As is needful
for our sustenance? Do you give us things of greater value than those you receive from us?
|
| 12 |
If others - Whether true or false apostles. Partake of this power - Have a right to be
maintained. Do not we rather - On account of our having laboured so much more? Lest we
should give any hinderance to the gospel - By giving an occasion of cavil or reproach. |
| 14 |
Matt 10:10 |
| 15 |
It were better for me to die than - To give occasion to them that seek occasion
against me, 2Cor 11:12. |
| 17 |
Willingly - He seems to mean, without receiving anything. St. Paul here speaks in a
manner peculiar to himself. Another might have preached willingly, and yet have received a
maintenance from the Corinthians. But if he had received anything from them, he would have
termed it preaching unwillingly. And so, in the next verse, another might have used that
power without abusing it. But his own using it at all, he would have termed abusing it. A
dispensation is intrusted to me - Therefore I dare not refrain. |
| 18 |
What then is my reward - That circumstance in my conduct for which I expect a peculiar
reward from my great Master? That I abuse not - Make not an unseasonable use of my power
which I have in preaching the gospel. |
| 19 |
I made myself the servant of all - I acted with as self - denying a regard to their
interest, and as much caution not to offend them, as if I had been literally their servant
or slave. Where is the preacher of the gospel who treads in the same steps? |
| 20 |
To the Jews I became as a Jew - Conforming myself in all things to their manner of
thinking and living, so far as; I could with innocence. To them that are under the law -
Who apprehend themselves to be still bound by the Mosaic law. As under the law - Observing
it myself, while I am among them. Not that he declared this to be necessary, or refused to
converse with those who did not observe it. This was the very thing which he condemned in
St. Peter, Gal 2:14. |
| 21 |
To them that are without the law - The heathens. As without the law - Neglecting its
ceremonies. Being not without the law to God - But as much as ever under its moral
precepts. Under the law to Christ - And in this sense all Christians will be under the law
for ever. |
| 22 |
I became as weak - As if I had been scrupulous too. I became all things to all men -
Accommodating myself to all, so far as I could consistent with truth and sincerity. |
| 24 |
Know ye not that - In those famous games which are kept at the isthmus, near your
city. They who run in the foot race all run, though but one receiveth the prize - How much
greater encouragement have you to run; since ye may all receive the prize of your high
calling! |
| 25 |
And every one that there contendeth is temperate in all things - To an almost
incredible degree; using the most rigorous self denial in food, sleep, and every other
sensual indulgence. A corruptible crown - A garland of leaves, which must soon wither. The
moderns only have discovered that it is "legal" to do all this and more for an
eternal crown than they did for a corruptible! |
| 26 |
I so run, not as uncertainly - I look straight to the goal; I run straight toward it.
I cast away every weight, regard not any that stand by. I fight not as one that beateth
the air - This is a proverbial expression for a man's missing his blow, and spending his
strength, not on his enemy, but on empty air. |
| 27 |
But I keep under my body - By all kinds of self denial. And bring it into subjection -
To my spirit and to God. The words are strongly figurative, and signify the mortification
of the body of sin, "by an allusion to the natural bodies of those who were bruised
or subdued in combat. Lest by any means after having preached - The Greek word means,
after having discharged the office of an herald, (still carrying on the allusion,) whose
office it was to proclaim the conditions, and to display the prizes. I myself should
become a reprobate - Disapproved by the Judge, and so falling short of the prize. This
single text may give us a just notion of the scriptural doctrine of election and
reprobation; and clearly shows us, that particular persons are not in holy writ
represented as elected absolutely and unconditionally to eternal life, or predestinated
absolutely and unconditionally to eternal death; but that believers in general are elected
to enjoy the Christian privileges on earth; which if they abuse, those very elect persons
will become reprobate. St. Paul was certainly an elect person, if ever there was one; and
yet he declares it was possible he himself might become a reprobate. Nay, he actually
would have become such, if he had not thus kept his body under, even though he had been so
long an elect person, a Christian, and an apostle. |
Chapter X
| 1 |
Now - That ye may not become reprobates, consider how highly favoured your fathers
were, who were God's elect and peculiar people, and nevertheless were rejected by him.
They were all under the cloud - That eminent token of God's gracious presence, which
screened them from the heat of the sun by day, and gave them light by night. And all
passed through the sea - God opening a way through the midst of the waters. Exod
13:21 Exod 14:22 |
| 2 |
And were all, as it were, baptized unto Moses - initiated into the religion which he
taught them. In the cloud and in the sea - Perhaps sprinkled here and there with drops of
water from the sea or the cloud, by which baptism might be the more evidently signified. |
| 3 |
And all ate the same manna, termed spiritual meat, as it was typical,
- Of Christ and his spiritual benefits:
- Of the sacred bread which we eat at his table.
Exod 16:15. |
| 4 |
And all drank the same spiritual drink - Typical of Christ, and of that cup which we
drink. For they drank out of the spiritual or mysterious rock, the wonderful streams of
which followed them in their several journeyings, for many years, through the wilderness.
And that rock was a manifest type of Christ - The Rock of Eternity, from whom his people
derive those streams of blessings which follow them through all this wilderness. Exod
17:6. |
| 5 |
Yet - Although they had so many tokens of the divine presence. They were overthrown -
With the most terrible marks of his displeasure. |
| 6 |
Now these things were our examples - Showing what we are to expect if, enjoying the
like benefits, we commit the like sins. The benefits are set down in the same order as by
Moses in Exodus; the sins and punishments in a different order; evil desire first, as
being the foundation of all; next, idolatry, 1Co 10:7,14; then fornication,
which usually accompanied it, 1Co 10:8; the tempting and murmuring against
God, in the following verses. As they desired - Flesh, in contempt of manna. Num
11:4 |
| 7 |
Neither be ye idolaters - And so, "neither murmur ye," 1Co 10:10.
The other cautions are given in the first person; but these in the second. And with what
exquisite propriety does he vary the person! It would have been improper to say, Neither
let us be idolaters; for he was himself in no danger of idolatry; nor probably of
murmuring against Christ, or the divine providence. To play - That is, to dance, in honour
of their idol. Exod 32:6. |
| 8 |
And fell in one day three and twenty thousand - Beside the princes who were afterwards
hanged, and those whom the judges slew so that there died in all four and twenty thousand.
Num 25:1,9. |
| 9 |
Neither let us tempt Christ - By our unbelief. St. Paul enumerates five benefits, 1Co
10:1 - 4; of which the fourth and fifth were closely connected together; and five
sins, the fourth and fifth of which were likewise closely connected. In speaking of the
fifth benefit, he expressly mentions Christ; and in speaking of the fourth sin, he shows
it was committed against Christ. As some of them tempted him - This sin of the people was
peculiarly against Christ; for when they had so long drank of that rock, yet they murmured
for want of water. Num 21:4, &c |
| 10 |
The destroyer - The destroying angel. Num 14:1,36 |
| 11 |
On whom the ends of the ages are come - The expression has great force. All things
meet together, and come to a crisis, under the last, the gospel, dispensation; both
benefits and dangers, punishments and rewards. It remains, that Christ come as an avenger
and judge. And even these ends include various periods, succeeding each other. |
| 12 |
The common translation runs, Let him that thinketh he standeth; but the word
translated thinketh, most certainly strengthens, rather than weakens, the sense. |
| 13 |
Common to man - Or, as the Greek word imports, proportioned to human strength. God is
faithful - In giving the help which he hath promised. And he will with the temptation -
Provide for your deliverance. |
| 14 |
Flee from idolatry - And from all approaches to it. |
| 16 |
The cup which we bless - By setting it apart to a sacred use, and solemnly invoking
the blessing of God upon it. Is it not the communion of the blood of Christ - The means of
our partaking of those invaluable benefits, which are the purchase of the blood of Christ.
The communion of the body of Christ - The means of our partaking of those benefits which
were purchased by the body of Christ - offered for us. |
| 17 |
For it is this communion which makes us all one. We being many are yet, as it were,
but different parts of one and the same broken bread, which we receive to unite us in one
body. |
| 18 |
Consider Israel after the flesh - Christians are the spiritual "Israel of
God." Are not they who eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar - Is not this an
act of communion with that God to whom they are offered? And is not the case the same with
those who eat of the sacrifices which have been offered to idols? |
| 19 |
What say I then - Do I in saying this allow that an idol is anything divine? I aver,
on the contrary, that what the heathens sacrifice, they sacrifice to devils. Such in
reality are the gods of the heathens; and with such only can you hold communion in those
sacrifices. |
| 21 |
Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils - You cannot have communion
with both. |
| 22 |
Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy - By thus caressing his rivals? Are we stronger
than he - Are we able to resist, or to bear his wrath? |
| 23 |
Supposing this were lawful in itself, yet it is not expedient, it is not edifying to
my neighbour. |
| 24 |
His own only, but another's welfare also. |
| 25 |
The apostle now applies this principle to the point in question. Asking no questions -
Whether it has been sacrificed or not. |
| 26 |
For God, who is the Creator, Proprietor, and Disposer of the earth and all that is
therein, hath given the produce of it to the children of men, to be used without scruple. Psalm
24:1 |
| 28 |
For his sake that showed thee, and for conscience' sake - That is, for the sake of his
weak conscience, lest it should be wounded. |
| 29 |
Conscience I say, not thy own - I speak of his conscience, not thine. For why is my
liberty judged by another's conscience - Another's conscience is not the standard of mine,
nor is another's persuasion the measure of my liberty. |
| 30 |
If I by grace am a partaker - If I thankfully use the common blessings of God. |
| 31 |
Therefore - To close the present point with a general rule, applicable not only in
this, but in all cases, Whatsoever ye do - In all things whatsoever, whether of a
religious or civil nature, in all the common, as well as sacred, actions of life, keep the
glory of God in view, and steadily pursue in all this one end of your being, the planting
or advancing the vital knowledge and love of God, first in your own soul, then in all
mankind. |
| 32 |
Give no offence - If, and as far as, it is possible. |
| 33 |
Even as I, as much as lieth in me, please all men. |
Chapter XI
| 2 |
I praise you - The greater part of you. |
| 3 |
I would have you know - He does not seem to have given them any order before
concerning this. The head of every man - Particularly every believer. Is Christ, and the
head of Christ is God - Christ, as he is Mediator, acts in all things subordinately to his
Father. But we can no more infer that they are not of the same divine nature, because God
is said to be the head of Christ, than that man and woman are not of the same human
nature, because the man is said to be the head of the woman. |
| 4 |
Every man praying or prophesying - Speaking by the immediate power of God. With his
head - And face. Covered - Either with a veil or with long hair. Dishonoureth his head -
St. Paul seems to mean, As in these eastern nations veiling the head is a badge of
subjection, so a man who prays or prophesies with a veil on his head, reflects a dishonour
on Christ, whose representative he is. |
| 5 |
But every woman - Who, under an immediate impulse of the Spirit, (for then only was a
woman suffered to speak in the church,) prays or prophesies without a veil on her face, as
it were disclaims subjection, and reflects dishonour on man, her head. For it is the same,
in effect, as if she cut her hair short, and wore it in the distinguishing form of the
men. In those ages, men wore their hair exceeding short, as appears from the ancient
statues and pictures. |
| 6 |
Therefore if a woman is not covered - If she will throw off the badge of subjection,
let her appear with her hair cut like a man's. But if it be shameful far a woman to appear
thus in public, especially in a religious assembly, let her, for the same reason, keep on
her veil. |
| 7 |
A man indeed ought not to veil his head, because he is the image of God - In the
dominion he bears over the creation, representing the supreme dominion of God, which is
his glory. But the woman is only matter of glory to the man, who has a becoming dominion
over her. Therefore she ought not to appear, but with her head veiled, as a tacit
acknowledgment of it. |
| 8 |
The man is not - In the first production of nature. |
| 10 |
For this cause also a woman ought to be veiled in the public assemblies, because of
the angels - Who attend there, and before whom they should be careful not to do anything
indecent or irregular. |
| 11 |
Nevertheless in the Lord Jesus, there is neither male nor female - Neither is
excluded; neither is preferred before the other in his kingdom. |
| 12 |
And as the woman was at first taken out of the man, so also the man is now, in the
ordinary course of nature, by the woman; but all things are of God - The man, the woman,
and their dependence on each other. |
| 13 |
Judge of yourselves - For what need of more arguments if so plain a case? Is it decent
for a woman to pray to God - The Most High, with that bold and undaunted air which she
must have, when, contrary to universal custom, she appears in public with her head
uncovered? |
| 14 |
For a man to have long hair, carefully adjusted, is such a mark of effeminacy as is a
disgrace to him. |
| 15 |
Given her - Originally, before the arts of dress were in being. |
| 16 |
We have no such custom here, nor any of the other churches of God - The several
churches that were in the apostles' time had different customs in things that were not
essential; and that under one and the same apostle, as circumstances, in different places,
made it convenient. And in all things merely indifferent the custom of each place was of
sufficient weight to determine prudent and peaceable men. Yet even this cannot overrule a
scrupulous conscience, which really doubts whether the thing be indifferent or no. But
those who are referred to here by the apostle were contentious, not conscientious,
persons. |
| 18 |
In the church - In the public assembly. I hear there are schisms among you; and I
partly believe it - That is, I believe it of some of you. It is plain that by schisms is
not meant any separation from the church, but uncharitable divisions in it; for the
Corinthians continued to be one church; and, notwithstanding all their strife and
contention, there was no separation of any one party from the rest, with regard to
external communion. And it is in the same sense that the word is used, 1Co 1:10;
1Co 12:25; which are the only places in the New Testament, beside this, where
church schisms are mentioned. Therefore, the indulging any temper contrary to this tender
care of each other is the true scriptural schism. This is, therefore, a quite different
thing from that orderly separation from corrupt churches which later ages have stigmatized
as schisms; and have made a pretence for the vilest cruelties, oppressions, and murders,
that have troubled the Christian world. Both heresies and schisms are here mentioned in
very near the same sense; unless by schisms be meant, rather, those inward animosities
which occasion heresies; that is, outward divisions or parties: so that whilst one said,
"I am of Paul," another, "I am of Apollos," this implied both schism
and heresy. So wonderfully have later ages distorted the words heresy and schism from
their scriptural meaning. Heresy is not, in all the Bible, taken for "an error in
fundamentals," or in anything else; nor schism, for any separation made from the
outward communion of others. Therefore, both heresy and schism, in the modern sense of the
words, are sins that the scripture knows nothing of; but were invented merely to deprive
mankind of the benefit of private judgment, and liberty of conscience. |
| 19 |
There must be heresies - Divisions. Among you - In the ordinary course of things; and
God permits them, that it may appear who among you are, and who are not, upright of heart.
|
| 20 |
Therefore - That is, in consequence of those schisms. It is not eating the Lord's
supper - That solemn memorial of his death; but quite another thing. |
| 21 |
For in eating what ye call the Lord's supper, instead of all partaking of one bread,
each person brings his own supper, and eats it without staying for the rest. And hereby
the poor, who cannot provide for themselves, have nothing; while the rich eat and drink to
the full just as the heathens use to do at the feasts on their sacrifices. |
| 22 |
Have ye not houses to eat and drink your common meals in? or do ye despise the church
of God - Of which the poor are both the larger and the better part. Do ye act thus in
designed contempt of them? |
| 23 |
I received - By an immediate revelation. |
| 24 |
This is my body, which is broken for you - That is, this broken bread is the sign of
my body, which is even now to be pierced and wounded for your iniquities. Take then, and
eat of, this bread, in an humble, thankful, obediential remembrance of my dying love; of
the extremity of my sufferings on your behalf, of the blessings I have thereby procured
for you, and of the obligations to love and duty which I have by all this laid upon you. |
| 25 |
After supper - Therefore ye ought not to confound this with a common meal. Do this in
remembrance of me - The ancient sacrifices were in remembrance of sin: this sacrifice,
once offered, is still represented in remembrance of the remission of sins. |
| 26 |
Ye show forth the Lord's death - Ye proclaim, as it were, and openly avow it to God,
and to all the world. Till he come - In glory. |
| 27 |
Whosoever shall eat this bread unworthily - That is, in an unworthy, irreverent
manner; without regarding either Him that appointed it, or the design of its appointment.
Shall be guilty of profaning that which represents the body and blood of the Lord. |
| 28 |
But let a man examine himself - Whether he know the nature and the design of the
institution, and whether it be his own desire and purpose throughly to comply therewith. |
| 29 |
For he that eateth and drinketh so unworthily as those Corinthians did, eateth and
drinketh judgment to himself - Temporal judgments of various kinds, 1Cor 11:30.
Not distinguishing the sacred tokens of the Lord's body - From his common food. |
| 30 |
For this cause - Which they had not observed. Many sleep - In death. |
| 31 |
If we would judge ourselves - As to our knowledge, and the design with which we
approach the Lord's table. We should not be thus judged - That is, punished by God. |
| 32 |
When we are thus judged, it is with this merciful design, that we may not be finally
condemned with the world. |
| 33 |
The rest - The other circumstances relating to the Lord's supper. |
Chapter XII
| 1 |
Now concerning spiritual gifts - The abundance of these in the churches of Greece
strongly refuted the idle learning of the Greek philosophers. But the Corinthians did not
use them wisely, which occasioned St. Paul's writing concerning them. He describes,
- The unity of the body, 1Cor 12:1 - 27:
- The variety of members and offices, 1Cor 12:27 - 30:
- The way of exercising gifts rightly, namely, by love, 1Cor 12:31, 1Cor
13:1. throughout: and adds,
- A comparison of several gifts with each other, in the 1Cor 14:1. fourteenth
chapter.
|
| 2 |
Ye were heathens - Therefore, whatever gifts ye have received, it is from the free
grace of God. Carried away - By a blind credulity. After dumb idols - The blind to the
dumb; idols of wood and stone, unable to speak themselves, and much more to open your
mouths, as God has done. As ye were led - By the subtlety of your priests. |
| 3 |
Therefore - Since the heathen idols cannot speak themselves, much less give spiritual
gifts to others, these must necessarily be among Christians only. As no one speaking by
the Spirit of God calleth Jesus accursed - That is, as none who does this, (which all the
Jews and heathens did,) speaketh by the Spirit of God - Is actuated by that Spirit, so as
to speak with tongues, heal diseases, or cast out devils. So no one can say, Jesus is the
Lord - None can receive him as such; for, in the scripture language, to say, or to
believe, implies an experimental assurance. But by the Holy Ghost - The sum is, None have
the Holy Spirit but Christians: all Christians have this Spirit. |
| 4 |
There are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit - Divers streams, but all from one
fountain. This verse speaks of the Holy Ghost, the next of Christ, the sixth of God the
Father. The apostle treats of the Spirit, 1Cor 12:7, &c.; of Christ, 1Cor
12:12, &c.; of God, 1Cor 12:28, &c. |
| 5 |
Administrations - Offices. But the same Lord appoints them all. |
| 6 |
Operations - Effects produced. This word is of a larger extent than either of the
former. But it is the same God who worketh all these effects in all the persons concerned.
|
| 7 |
The manifestation - The gift whereby the Spirit manifests itself. Is given to each -
For the profit of the whole body. |
| 8 |
The word of wisdom - A power of understanding and explaining the manifold wisdom of
God in the grand scheme of gospel salvation. The word of knowledge - Perhaps an
extraordinary ability to understand and explain the Old Testament types and prophecies. |
| 9 |
Faith may here mean an extraordinary trust in God under the most difficult or
dangerous circumstances. The gift of healing need not be wholly confined to the healing
diseases with a word or a touch. It may exert itself also, though in a lower degree, where
natural remedies are applied; and it may often be this, not superior skill, which makes
some physicians more successful than others. And thus it may be with regard to other gifts
likewise. As, after the golden shields were lost, the king of Judah put brazen in their
place, so, after the pure gifts were lost, the power of God exerts itself in a more covert
manner, under human studies and helps; and that the more plentifully, according as there
is the more room given for it. |
| 10 |
The working of other miracles. Prophecy - Foretelling things to come. The discerning -
Whether men be of an upright spirit or no; whether they have natural or supernatural gifts
for offices in the church; and whether they who profess to speak by inspiration speak from
a divine, a natural, or a diabolical spirit. |
| 11 |
As he willeth - The Greek word does not so much imply arbitrary pleasure, as a
determination founded on wise counsel. |
| 12 |
So is Christ - That is, the body of Christ, the church. |
| 13 |
For by that one Spirit, which we received in baptism, we are all united in one body.
Whether Jews or gentiles - Who are at the greatest distance from each other by nature.
Whether slaves or freemen - Who are at the greatest distance by law and custom. We have
all drank of one Spirit - In that cup, received by faith, we all imbibed one Spirit, who
first inspired, and still preserves, the life of God in our souls. |
| 15 |
The foot is elegantly introduced as speaking of the hand; the ear, of the eye; each,
of a part that has some resemblance to it. So among men each is apt to compare himself
with those whose gifts some way resemble his own, rather than with those who are at a
distance, either above or beneath him. Is it therefore not of the body - Is the inference
good? Perhaps the foot may represent private Christians; the hand, officers in the church;
the eye, teachers; the ear, hearers. |
| 16 |
The ear - A less noble part. The eye - The most noble. |
| 18 |
As it hath pleased him - With the most exquisite wisdom and goodness. |
| 20 |
But one body - And it is a necessary consequence of this unity, that the several
members need one another. |
| 21 |
Nor the head - The highest part of all. To the foot - The very lowest. |
| 22 |
The members which appear to be weaker - Being of a more delicate and tender structure;
perhaps the brains and bowels, or the veins, arteries, and other minute channels in the
body. |
| 23 |
We surround with more abundant honour - By so carefully covering them. More abundant
comeliness - By the help of dress. |
| 24 |
Giving more abundant honour to that which lacked - As being cared for and served by
the noblest parts. |
| 27 |
Now ye - Corinthians. Are the body and members of Christ - part of them, I mean, not
the whole body. |
| 28 |
First apostles - Who plant the gospel in the heathen nations. Secondly prophets - Who
either foretel things to come, or speak by extra - ordinary inspiration, for the
edification of the church. Thirdly teachers - Who precede even those that work miracles.
Under prophets and teachers are comprised evangelists and pastors, Eph 4:11.
Helps, governments - It does not appear that these mean distinct offices: rather, any
persons might be called helps, from a peculiar dexterity in helping the distressed; and
governments, from a peculiar talent for governing or presiding in assemblies. |
| 31 |
Ye covet earnestly the best gifts - And they are worth your pursuit, though but few of
you can attain them. But there is a far more excellent gift than all these; and one which
all may, yea, must attain or perish. |
Chapter XIII
The necessity of love is shown, 1Co 13:1 - 3. The nature and
properties, 1Co 13:4 - 7. The duration of it, 1Co 13:8 - 13
| 1 |
Though I speak with all the tongues - Which are upon earth, and with the eloquence of
an angel. And have not love - The love of God, and of all mankind for his sake, I am no
better before God than the sounding instruments of brass, used in the worship of some of
the heathen gods. Or a tinkling cymbal - This was made of two pieces of hollow brass,
which, being struck together, made a tinkling, but very little variety of sound. |
| 2 |
And though I have the gift of prophecy - Of foretelling future events. And understand
all the mysteries - Both of God's word and providence. And all knowledge - Of things
divine and human, that ever any mortal attained to. And though I have the highest degree
of miracle working faith, and have not this love, I am nothing. |
| 3 |
And though I - Deliberately, piece by piece. Give all my goods to feed the poor, yea,
though I deliver up my body to be burned - Rather than I would renounce my religion. And
have not the love - Hereafter described. It profiteth me nothing - Without this, whatever
I speak, whatever I have, whatever I know, whatever I do, whatever I suffer, is nothing. |
| 4 |
The love of God, and of our neighbour for God's sake, is patient toward, all men. It,
suffers all the weakness, ignorance, errors, and infirmities of the children of God; all
the malice and wickedness of the children of the world: and all this, not only for a time,
but to the end. And in every step toward overcoming evil with good, it is kind, soft,
mild, benign. It inspires the sufferer at once with the most amiable sweetness, and the
most fervent and tender affection. Love acteth not rashly - Does not hastily condemn any
one; never passes a severe sentence on a slight or sudden view of things. Nor does it ever
act or behave in a violent, headstrong, or precipitate manner. Is not puffed up - Yea,
humbles the soul to the dust. |
| 5 |
It doth not behave indecently - Is not rude, or willingly offensive, to any. It
renders to all their due - Suitable to time, person, and all other circumstances. Seeketh
not her own - Ease, pleasure, honour, or temporal advantage. Nay, sometimes the lover of
mankind seeketh not, in some sense, even his own spiritual advantage; does not think of
himself, so long as a zeal for the glory of God and the souls of men swallows him up. But,
though he is all on fire for these ends, yet he is not provoked to sharpness or unkindness
toward any one. Outward provocations indeed will frequently occur; but he triumphs over
all. Love thinketh no evil - Indeed it cannot but see and hear evil things, and know that
they are so; but it does not willingly think evil of any; neither infer evil where it does
not appear. It tears up, root and branch, all imagining of what we have not proof. It
casts out all jealousies, all evil surmises, all readiness to believe evil. |
| 6 |
Rejoiceth not in iniquity - Yea, weeps at either the sin or folly of even an enemy;
takes no pleasure in hearing or in repeating it, but desires it may be forgotten for ever.
But rejoiceth in the truth - Bringing forth its proper fruit, holiness of heart and life.
Good in general is its glory and joy, wherever diffused in all the world. |
| 7 |
Love covereth all things - Whatever evil the lover of mankind sees, hears, or knows of
any one, he mentions it to none; it never goes out of his lips, unless where absolute duty
constrains to speak. Believeth all things - Puts the most favourable construction on
everything, and is ever ready to believe whatever may tend to the advantage of any one
character. And when it can no longer believe well, it hopes whatever may excuse or
extenuate the fault which cannot be denied. Where it cannot even excuse, it hopes God will
at length give repentance unto life. Meantime it endureth all things - Whatever the
injustice, the malice, the cruelty of men can inflict. He can not only do, but likewise
suffer, all things, through Christ who strengtheneth him. |
| 8 |
Love never faileth - It accompanies to, and adorns us in, eternity; it prepares us
for, and constitutes, heaven. But whether there be prophecies, they shall fail - When all
things are fulfilled, and God is all in all. Whether there be tongues, they shall cease -
One language shall prevail among all the inhabitants of heaven, and the low and imperfect
languages of earth be forgotten. The knowledge likewise which we now so eagerly pursue,
shall then vanish away - As starlight is lost in that of the midday sun, so our present
knowledge in the light of eternity. |
| 9 |
For we know in part, and we prophesy in part - The wisest of men have here but short,
narrow, imperfect conceptions, even of the things round about them, and much more of the
deep things of God. And even the prophecies which men deliver from God are far from taking
in the whole of future events, or of that wisdom and knowledge of God which is treasured
up in the scripture revelation. |
| 10 |
But when that which is perfect is come - At death and in the last day. That which is
in part shall vanish away - Both that poor, low, imperfect, glimmering light, which is all
the knowledge we now can attain to; and these slow and unsatisfactory methods of
attaining, as well as of imparting it to others. |
| 11 |
In our present state we are mere infants in point of knowledge, compared to what we
shall be hereafter. I put away childish things - Of my own accord, willingly, without
trouble. |
| 12 |
Now we see - Even the things that surround us. But by means of a glass - Or mirror,
which reflects only their imperfect forms, in a dim, faint, obscure manner; so that our
thoughts about them are puzzling and intricate, and everything is a kind of riddle to us.
But then - We shall see, not a faint reflection, but the objects themselves. Face to face
- Distinctly. Now I know in part - Even when God himself reveals things to me, great part
of them is still kept under the veil. But then I shall know even as also I am known - In a
clear, full, comprehensive manner; in some measure like God, who penetrates the centre of
every object, and sees at one glance through my soul and all things. |
| 13 |
Faith, hope, love - Are the sum of perfection on earth; love alone is the sum of
perfection in heaven. |
Chapter XIV
| 1 |
Follow after love - With zeal, vigour, courage, patience; else you can neither attain
nor keep it. And - In their place, as subservient to this. Desire spiritual gifts; but
especially that ye may prophesy - The word here does not mean foretelling things to come;
but rather opening and applying the scripture. |
| 2 |
He that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaks, in effect, not to men, but to God - Who
alone understands him. |
| 4 |
Edifieth himself - Only, on the most favourable supposition. The church - The whole
congregation. |
| 5 |
Greater - That is, more useful. By this alone are we to estimate all our gifts and
| |